Skip to product information
1 of 1
Regular price £23.99 GBP
Regular price £22.99 GBP Sale price £23.99 GBP
Sale Sold out
Free UK Shipping

Freshly Printed - allow 8 days lead

Forging Romantic China
Sino-British Cultural Exchange 1760–1840

The first major study to focus on British and Chinese cultural relations in the Romantic period.

Peter J. Kitson (Author)

9781107623613, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 28 July 2016

328 pages, 9 b/w illus.
23 x 15.3 x 1.8 cm, 0.48 kg

'[A] detailed study.' Times Higher Education

The first major cultural study to focus exclusively on this decisive period in modern British-Chinese relations. Based on extensive archival investigations, Peter J. Kitson shows how British knowledge of China was constructed from the writings and translations of a diverse range of missionaries, diplomats, travellers, traders, and literary men and women during the Romantic period. The new perceptions of China that it gave rise to were mediated via a dynamic print culture to a diverse range of poets, novelists, essayists, dramatists and reviewers, including Jane Austen, Thomas Percy, William Jones, S. T. Coleridge, George Colman, Robert Southey, Charles Lamb, William and Dorothy Wordsworth and others, informing new British understandings and imaginings of China on the eve of the Opium War of 1839–42. Kitson aims to restore China to its true global presence in our understandings of the culture and literature of Britain in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.

Introduction
1. Thomas Percy and the forging of Romantic China
2. 'A wonderful stateliness': William Jones, Joshua Marshman, and the Bengal School of Sinology
3. 'They thought that Jesus and Confucius were alike': Robert Morrison, Malacca, and the missionary reading of China
4. 'Fruits of the highest culture may be improved and varied by foreign grafts': the Canton School of Romantic Sinology: Staunton and Davis
5. Establishing the 'Great Divide': scientific exchange and the Macartney Embassy
6. 'You will be taking a trip into China, I suppose': kowtows, tea cups, and the evasions of British Romantic writing on China
7. Chinese gardens, Confucius, and the prelude
8. 'Not a bit like the Chinese figures that adorn our chimney-pieces': orphans and travellers: China on stage
Bibliography.

Subject Areas: Black & Asian studies [JFSL3], General & world history [HBG], Literary studies: c 1500 to c 1800 [DSBD]

View full details